Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 64, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 1, 1936 Page: 1 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 26 x 22 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■
I
GAINESVILLE, COOKE COUNTY, TEXAS. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 1, 1936
VOL. XLVII
SIX PAGES
INTER-AMERICAN PEACE PARLEY OPENS
$
G°
PICKPOCKET
No Evidence Found
Bodyguard Of The
BOY UNABLE TO STOP TALKING
I
I
L
::
■ • ■
- "
4 ’
I
republics “make it
tions.
House visitors as the president's.
A patrolman’s
COLD WAVE IN GARNER TO AID
RAYBURNDRIVE
FOR FLOOR CHIEF
REBEL CAPITAL GAME ON FRIDAY
forged
G*
educate their children, contented
structure is maintained.
There has been no definite state- with their lot in life and on terms
up arms for a war of conquest.’’
house.
• el
work to do.”
r
r
- »
her mother's
Ireland’s four provinces.
in
The Weather
y
s -
3
i
d
Concern Expressed Over Number of
Consulate Workers’ Foreign Marriages
FRUSTRATES President Dies At
AN ASSASSIN Buenos Aires Dance
STORESTOBE
CLOSED DURING
EAST IS CAUSING
MUCH SUFFERING
SPANISH ARMIES
ARE PUSHING ON
Daughter of Former Cooke County
Citizen Heroine As Mother Burned
FLASHES '
OF LIFE
The Ubangi river is the largest
northern tributary of the Congo.
rambling
pending
WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (AP).—
Substantial revenue increases dur-
ing the first five months of this
fiscal year today raised adminis-
FOR SAYS US
NOT TO JOIN
THE LEAGUE
BONHAM MAN BEST EQUIP-
PED FOR POST, SAYS THE
VICE PRESIDENT TODAY
President Makes Speech He
Traveled 6,000 Miles To
Deliver at Conference
REVENUE INCREASE
RAISES BUDGET HOPE
r •
Attempt On Life of Jap
Premier Koki Hirota is
Unwittingly Defeated
seeing tour of Buenos Aires later
today but the remainder of the ar-
ranged program would not be al-
tered.
Agriculture D e p a r t m ent
Makes Report of Its Su-
pervisor’s Findings
There are two towns in Alabama
named Jackson.
The executive order stipulated
that "before citstrafting marriage
with a person of foreign national-
ity each foreign service officer
must request and obtain permis-
sion so to do from the Secretary
of State under such instructions
as may be issued by him.**
Teague Company
J. C. Penney Company
Dress Up Shop
Goodrich Drug Store
Commerce Street Store
Dixie Store
LaMode
Dr. R. C. Whiddon
MAYBE SUSPENSE KILLED IT
SAN ANGELO — John Boles,
screen actor, went hunting in the
hill country southeast of here.
He brought back a 95-pound, 8-
point buck, killed by a single shot.
But hunting comanions said Boles
tired 18 times before the buck fell.
arg
l
—--4
ALIBI
CHICAGO
Gas Company
Clayton Dry Goods Company
1
SEEKING JURY FOR
TRIAL MURDER CASE
RETURN OF RANGER
CAPTAIN AWAITED
LEAGUE COUNCIL
TO MEET DEC 10
LABOR MEASURES
TO BE INTRODUCED
GIRL SNEEZES FOR
THE PAST S3 DAYS
nSHOPPING DAS
•IL CHRISTMAS
- . — - L
SIX-POUND SPUD
CHARLESTON, S. C. (AP).—
Karl Williams, 4, grows big things
on his farm. Exhibit A: A six-
pound potato.
-
6 - - :
f 5- -
28878
MARY M’CORMIC
DENIES ANY RIFT
1
n
Cigarette Sitting Hen
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP).—State
revenue men reported seizure of 18
packages of un-tax stamped cig-
arettes from under a setting hen.
Owner at the hen pleaded guilty
to violation of the tobacco tax law.
SAN I HAVE SOME Moyev
; FOR uRiTMS, DAS =
-
THEY BROUGHT HIM
BACK ALIVE
SILVERTON, Ore.—Albert Di-
cito went driving without: 1.—An
automobile license. 2.—A driver’s
license. 3.—Brakes.
He bumped into an automobile
containing: 1.—A constable. 2.—
(Continued On Page Six)
WEATHER
Gainesville and Vicinity—To-
night and Wednesday, occasional
rains.
Today noon, 42; low last night,
40; high, yesterday, 48; for year,
high, 114; low, 6.
-
1 )
8 bdc8
E
S.. :
Sunday that he was pleased with I fire in the base of the pot set of f
the progress she is m wiring I the kerosene.
Jean’s picture appeared on the Mrs. Crenshaw visited relatives
first page of the Star in connec- and friends in Gainesville last Au-
tian with the account of the mis- gust
le"
{.gA1
SALT LAKE CITY (AP).—The
Wagstaff triplets got an unusual
gift on their fifth birthday. It was
a membership in the Salt Lake
Visiting Nurse asociation, entitling
them Ao free nursing care through-
out the year.
-
GENEVA, Dec. 1 (AP).—The
League of Nations council will
meet in Geneva Dec. 10 to discuss
the Spanish civil war, Agustin Ed-
wards, president of the council, an-
nounced today.
Edwards, the Chilean represen-
tative, said the decision was a
compromise, reached after council
members divided about equally on
two other suggested dates—Dec. 7
and Dec. 14. 1 -
perts said today that continuance
of the present uptrend, plus some
reduction in relief expenditures
would balance receipts and spend-
ing next year.
Receipts for this period totaled
31.623,043.000, an incerase of
3171,981,000 over a year ago. In
the forefront of individual tax In-
creases were income levies, which,
at 3418,598,00, gained 391,496,000.
old hap. Jean heard
Street Car ‘Infirmary”
RICHMOND, Va. (AP).—Doc-
tors said 18-year-old Luther Scott
would need plenty of sunlight to
recover from critical burns, so his
parents bought an old street car
and converted it into a well ven-
tilated “infirmary.”
Buenos AIRES, Dec. 1 (AP).
President Roosevelt opened the
Inter-American peace conference
tonight with an assertion the 21
new world republios could help
avert war in the old world by
maintaining peace among them-
selves
But at the same time, the presi-
dent proposed that the American
.9
The strange case of 4-year-old Emmie Wilson (above), Memphis
boy who can’t stop talking, is puzzling his doctors. On the hos-
filial Qhart.. the to? for diagnosis remains blank. (Associated
Press Photo)
-
\T
34 "
u.,
WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (AP).—
Expressing concern at the large
number of marriages of American
diplomatic and consular officers to
foreigners, the State Departemnt
today made public an executive or-
der by President Roosevelt, for-
bidding them to contract such
unions without specific permission
of the Secretary of State.
The executive order signed by
President Roosevelt on November
17 was included in a special con-
sular instruction sent to all Ameri-
can foreign service officers.
"In the present condition of
world affairs, the State Depart-
ment warns its representatives
abroad ’any tendency further to
Inability to find an experienced
fireman to operate the modern
type boiler left the structure with-
out heat.
Amid a chattering of teeth the
commissioners approved the pur-
chase of electric fans.
married to women of alien birth
and that 27 per cent of embassy
and consular clerks have taken the
same step.
The executive order, however,
does not apply to clerks.
“A full realization on the part of
all members of the foreign service
must be had,” the order said, “that
the foreign service offers advan-
tages sufficient to expect sacrifices
when the good of that service as a
service is considered and a definite
sense of obligation to the service
is expected and must be insisted
upon.
‘The situation has at last reach-
ed such proportions in the foreign
service that definite action cannot
.64
-
V
AUSTIN, Dec. 1 (AP). — Offi-
cials of the State Labor Depart-
ment have started work on a series
of bills which they will ask the
legislature to pass at its regular
session opening next month. They
are designed to further safeguard
the rights of workers.
The main labor controversy, as
in many past sessions, likely will
be on ratification of the proposed
child labor amendment to the
United States constitution. The
amendment has been up for state
consideration for 12 years but ad-
vocates never have been able to ob-
tain a favorable vote in the sen-
ate. The house several times has
approved it.
Another question which might
cause considerable discussion is
what to do with boxing and wrest-
ling. The labor commissioner now
supervises those sports. Both the
State Federation of Labor and
Commissioner Fred E. Nichols feel
some other agency should handle
them.
WAR DEBT OFFER
PARIS, Dec. 1 (AP).—France
will offer to settle its war debt to
the United States, parliamentary
circles forecast today for one-
eighth of the total amount owed
today.
pointed remark was so devastat-
ing to Edward Kubik’s alibi that
a criminal court jury took only two
minutes to start him back to prison
for a life term under the habitual
criminal act.
The 25-year-old paroled burglar
said the man police caught robbing
a drug store must have been some
other fellow because he was play-
ing pinochle in a Montrose Ave-
nue apartment at the time. He de-
scribed the “apartment” in detail.
A patrolman testified the Mont-
rose Avenue address was a city
pumping station.
dear” they
prevent aggression should war
flare abroad.
The president declared flatly
today at a peace conference there
was no possibility of the United
old father threatened
his son for taking
WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (AP).—
Sneezing every five minutes, as
she has most of the last 53 days,
golden haired Mary Margaret
Cleer of nearby Fort Myer, Va.,
looked forward hopefully today to
treatments at Johns Hopkins hos-
pital in Baltimore.
The 13-year-old honor student
who broke into a fit of sneezing at
her school desk October 9, has sup-
plemented the efforts of doctors to
stop her "ker-choos" with home
remedies sent her in fan mail from
many parts of the globe. None has
worked.
spells" but let him off
good behavior.
BILBO A, Spain, Dec. 1 (AP).—
Spanish government armies of
the north pushed forward on two
fronts today in a combined of-
fensive directed at Burgos, seat of
the Insurgent junta.
Supported by tanks and gre-
nade -throwers the advance pro-
ceeded thus:
1—A “santander” army of the
west seized the village of Soncillo,
near a main highway to the In-
Of Price Fixing In
Buying Of Turkeys
p
WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (AP).—
The agricultural department said
today it found no basis for com-
plaints form Crawford, Tex., that
low turkey prices this season re-
sulted from price fixing by pack-
ers.
J. R. Mohler, chief of the bureau
of. animal husbandry, advised Sen-
ator Tom Connally of Texas, who
received original protests, that J.
H. Ruff, the bureau’s supervisor at
Fort Worth, "was unable to pro-
cure any evidence tending to show
that the prices offered were the
result of a combination or agree-
ment among packers to fix
prices.”
Other inquiries were made at
McGregor and Waco, Mohler said,
and a survey of the situation was
under way at Gonzales.
The complaints were against a
Chicago market price of about 28
cents a pound for dressed turkeys,
compared with a 12-cent price for
live fowls in Texas.
Quality Declines
Mohler said Ruff learned the
quality of the turkey crop this
year was much below last year
and the quantity much greater.
“Statistics in this department
show that there are about 20,000,-
000 turkeys in the United States
this year, as compared with 15,-
000,000 last year, an increase in
production of about 5,000,000 tur-
keys." Mohler said.
Reports of the bureau of agri-
cultural economics of last year, as
compared with reports of this
year, at a number of principal
markets, such as Chicago, Boston,
Washington, Philadelphia and New
York indicate that the prices be-
ing paid for turkeys this year are
consistently lower by several cents
per pound as compared with the
prices last year.”
TEXAS BUDGET TO BE
SENT TO GOVERNOR
BUENOS AIRES, Dec. 1 (AP).
August (Gus) Gennerich, Presi-
dent Roosevelt’s personal body-
guard, died today of a heart attack
while dancing in a Buenos Aires
restaurant.
Gennerich, a former New York
City detective, was pronounced
dead by the president’s physician,
Dr. Rott I. McIntire.
The president was not imme-
diately informed of the death.
Gennerich, who was 55 years old,
had gone to the restaurant with
George Fox, chief White House
pharmacist, and Charles Claunch,
chief yeoman at the presidential
residence. *
He collapsed suddenly about 3
a. m. (1 a. m., E. S. T.)
Gennerich had been Mr. Roose-
velt’s bodyguard since 1928 and
had accompanied the president on
all of his trips.
Official circles predicted Mr.
Roosevelt might cancel his sight-
to thrash
screams coming from the base-
ment of their home and rushed to
Mrs. Crenshaw's side, finding her
enveloped in flames.
The girl first poured water on
her mother’s flaming clothes and
then beat out the fire with her
hands. She then rushed to the
home of a neighbor and called for
first aid. The fire department res-
cue squad rushed to the home and
administered first aid.
Mrs. Crenshaw had gone to the
basement to start a fire. She
placed several pieces of wood in
the furnace and started to pour
kerosene on the wood when a small
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Crenshaw. 4853 Columbus avenue,
Minneapolis, Minnesota, was the
heroine of a fire which seriously
burned her mother in the basement
of their home recently, according
to a newspaper clipping from the
Minneapolis Star received by The
Register.
Mrs. Crenshaw, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. B. F. Porter of Cooke
county and sister of Mrs. Cari Me-
Cracken of this city, was so seri-
ously burned on the face, arms and
upper part of the body, that her
life was despaired of for days.
However, her physician stated
with concern.
“A recent check-up on persons
who are married to persons of for-
eign birth reveals a state of affairs
that cannot be regarded with ap-
probation.", ona - '
It added that 18 per cent of
foreign service career officials are
Jean Crenshaw, 12 year
WASHINGTON, Dee. 1 1AP).—
Vice President Garner said today
he would support actively the cam-
paign of Rep. Sam Rayburn of
Texas for floor leader in the next
House of Representatives.
“I am supporting Sam 200 per
cent because he is the best equip-
ped man for that place,” Gamer
said.
The vice president would not say
why he returned to Washington
earlier than ever before, but he
commented with a smile.
“I don’t believe the president
has any objection to my being
here.”
ment, however, that the budget of friendship with their neighbors,
will be balanced next year. ’ will defend themselves to the ut-
Surveying income from last July most but will never consent to take
1 through November 27, fiscal ex-
fresh WATER SHIPPING IS
TIED UP; FIREMEN ARE
HANDICAPPED IN WORK
-
■■■
FANCY VEGETABLE
GETTYSBURG, Pa Mrs. Ruth
Hartzel now has a "one carrot"
wedding ring.
Her gold band, lost two years
ago in her father’s garden, turned
up around the tip of a carrot that
her mother, Mrs. L. J. Blucher,
pulled up from the vegetable plot.
stand "shoulder to shoulder” to
hcamgged sswxs States entering the League of Na-
Gctineshille
OUTFOXED
ABERDEEN, S D.-Municipal
Judge George W. Crane’s decision
paraphrased the old saw to show a
fox in hand is worth two in the
bush.
Walter Perrin set a trap for a
fox. The animal stepped into it
but scampered away with the trap
and was captured by a neighboring
fanner.
Judge Crane ruled out Perrin's
claim to the fox because he had
not ‘reduced it to lawful posses-
sion."
‘5 f -
TOKYO, Dec. 1 (AP). —.A
pickpocket unwittingly frustrated
a plan to assassinate Premier Koki
Hirota, authorities disclosed to-
day.
The pickpocket was one link in
a chain of extraordinary circum-
stances which delivered Ko Wat-
anabe, 36, to the police.
Watanabe, arrested with dyna-
mite, a razor-edged spearhead and
petitions to five cabinet ministers
in his possession, told police he
had sought a chance for three days
to kill the premier.
He said he had about 50 yen
(343) when he arrived in Tokyo
from Fukushima prefecture, and
had planned to spend part of it to
bribe Hirota’s chauffeur in order to
get near enough to the premier to
attack him.
But when he stopped to buy a
bottle of milk, he told police, his
pockets were picked clean. Penni-
less, he sat on a park bench to
think over the situation.
The milk, apparently, was con-
taminated. Watanabe soon became
I violently ill. A passing policeman
offered to massage his stomach.
While performing this service,
the patrolman discovered the
dynamite and petitions concealed
in Watanabe’s clothing. He imme-
diately took Watanabe to the po-
lice station where, officials said,
he confessed.
NEW YORK, Dec. 1 (AP).—
The East was swept today by a
cold wave which tied up fresh
water shipping, interfered with
firemen and caused much suffer-
ing
Minimum temperatures east of
the Rockies were everywhere be-
low freezing. The warmest big
city in the United States was
Miami, with a maximum of 72.
The streets of New York were
swept by winds with the tempera-
ture 12 degrees above zero at 5:30
a. m., eastern standard time.
Lowell, Mass., experienced the
coldest December 1 in 47 years
when the thermometer fell to 8
above zero.
Canal traffic in the eastern in-
land waterways was impeded by
the intense cold as sludge ice
started to solidify.
increase the number of marriages
of this character must be regarded longer be delayed.
1 1
1 1
r d
i -
& 8
/ %
tration hopes that the seven year the Americas the highest possible
gap between income and outgo i standard of living conditions for
may be closed next year. , all our people.
Administration leaders have "Men and women blessed with
forecast that improving business political freedom, willing to work
will boost receipts to the level of and able to find work, rich enough
expenditures if the present takx to maintain their families and to
. -
■
The number of Gainesville busi-
ness establishments which will be
closed Friday afternoon from 2 to
5 o’clock to permit employers and
employees to attend the McKin-
ney-Gainesville football game at
Leeper stadium, was steadily
growing Tuesday.
‘Each of these business estab-
lishments has a sticker on the
front door stating "Beat McKin-
ney, Leopards. We are Support-
ing the Leopards 100 per cent. We
will be closed from 2 to 5 p. m.
Friday for the McKinney-Gaines-
ville game.”
These stickers are available at
the Signal, the Free Press or the
Register office to any and all who
desire them for their places of
business, and all stores which will
be listed in The Register this week.
Those already listed have volun-
teered to close without solicita-
tion. and others are expected to
join the list. A house-to-house
canvass will probably be made
later in the week.
Those which will close include:
Gainesville National Bank
First State Bank.
Gainesville Register
The Free Press
Gainesville Signal
East Side Cleaners
Acme Cleaners
Deluxe Cleaners
Portis Sims, Cleaners
Dickerman Drug Store
Watts Brothers Pharmacy
Manhattan Clothiers
Pace Brothers Motor Co.
G. L. (Stogie) Mitchell
Alaskan Sandwich Shop
Coffee Pot Sandwich Shop
J. A. Thomas Food Store
Dr. J. W. Truitt. \
Schad and Pulte
Turner Hotel Barber Shop
John Gray •
Batis Cleaners and Pressers
Shady and Herrmann Electric
Shop
Gainesville Printing Company
Gainesville Typewriter Exchange
Turbeville Music Store
W. B Kinne and Sons
Horace Dobkins
• Texas Power and Light Com-
pany
The Fashion Shop
Webster Truck LAnes
Levine’s, Nos. 1 and 2 Stores
Safeway Store
Wilfong’s Department Store
NUMBER OF ESTABLISH-
MENTS ALREADY JOIN
RANKS; MORE TO FOLLOW
2
Ai,’,
—
Served Eight Years
WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (AP).—
For eight years, brawny "Gus”
Gennerich stood at Franklin D.
Roosevelt’s elbow watching every
movement of visitors and crowds
to see that no .harm came to his
chief.
When Mr. Roosevelt was elected
governor of New York in 1928
Gennerich was "borrowed" from
the New York City police depart-
ment to become his bodyguard. He
had been with Mr. Roosevelt ever
since.
Gennerich was proud of his du-
ties with Mr. Roosevelt—be was a
member of the secret service—and
AUSTIN, Dec. 1 (AP). — J. D.
Hall, budget director of the Board
of Control, said today part of the
new biennium budget would be
ready for the governor’s study
soon.
Members and employees of the
board have been working on the
budget since last January and
Claude Teer, chairman. said the
budget recommendation would be
higher than it was two years ago.
"The people are demanding more
and more services from the gov-
ernment!” Teer said. "And these
services cost money. We are going
• to have more taxes or less govern-
ment and the trend unquestionably
is toward more taxes.”
He said the board would recom-
mend that salary cuts in 1933 be
restored approximately 90 per cent,
that there could be no let up in
the building program for hospitals
for the insane and schools were
showing material enrollment gains.
SAN PERLITA, Tex., Dec. 1
(AP).—Weary searchers, repeat-
edly defeated in efforts to find a
trace of Luther and John Blanton
since their disappearance Nov. 18.
marked time today awaiting the
return of Ranger Capt. Bill Me-
Murrey.
The continued absence of Cap-
tain McMurrey from the center of
the search gave rise to hopes he
might have found worthwhile clues
elsewhere.
A posse of 50 men, headed by
county officiers and rangers, re-
turned yesterday from a fruitless
search on the vast King ranch,
where the Blantons went to hunt
ducks and failed to return.
surgent "capital” and
His statement was made to Ar-
gentine newspaper men three
hours before Mr. Roosevelt was to
open the inter-American peace
conference of 21 nations.
Saddened by the death of Au-
gust (Gus) Gennerich, his friend
and protector, the president can-
celled a morning motor tour of
Buenos Aines suburbs.
Except for that ride, Mr. Roose-
velt’s program was left unchanged.
In the speech he had traveled
6,000 miles to make, the United
States chief executive urged “the
strengthening of the processes of
constitutional democratic govern-
ment” as the "best” means to
"prevent any future war among
ourselves.”
Adding these processes should
be made to ‘conform to the modern
need for unity and efficiency” and
at the same time to "preserve the
individual liberties of our citizens,”
the president said,
"By so doing, the people of our
nations, unlike the people of many
nations who live under other forms
of government, can and will insist
on their intention to live in peace.”
Second Peace Move
As a second move toward peace,
the president urged the American
republics to “strive even more
strongly than in the past to pre-
vent the creation of those condi-
tions which give rise to war.”
“Lack of social or political jus-
tice within the borders of any na-
tion is always cause for concern,”
he said. “Through democratic pro-
cesses we can strive to achieve for
Dailu Register
332833 *8 3 8 3r : •
TWO FORCES CONVERGING TO
LAUNCH OFFENSIVE ON
THE CITY OF BURGOS
" —
k--. «
E -
By Associated Press
FALL WARDROBE
BLUE SPRINGS, Mo.—Mary
Alice Goebel, 13, saw “something
like lightning” fell in her father’s
pasture. Search disclosed a stone
still warm, weighing more than a
pound, and witnesses called it a
"meteorite."
A neighbor woman offered to
buy Mary a ’’nice new party
dress” in exchange for the fallen
fragment. Mary urged her father
to fall in with the idea He did.
LAMESA, Tex., Dec. 1 (AP).—
Attorneys scught today to com-
plete a jury to try Monte Bridges
for the slaying of Bertha Gordon
near Post July 1, 1934.
Three jurors were accepted yes-
terday after the court denied a
motion for a change of venue.
Miss Gordon and Jay Donaldson
were found shot to- death on a
roadside. Bridges was given 20
years in Donaldson’s death.
ahead.
2—East of this force Basque
militiamen from Bilboa, fought
their way within 10 miles of Bi-
toria, which is about 70 miles
northeast of Burgos and com-
mands another main road leading
to it.
The Basques hoped to take Bi-
toria and then push forward to
Burgos arriving in time to launch
simultaneous attacks on the Fas-
cist capital with the santander
army.
HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Dec. 1
(AP):—Defying Hollywood gossip
to rumor the crash of her fourth,
marriage, Mary McCormic, oper-
atic soprano, settled down in bach-
elor quarters today.
"It’s about time for the rumors
to begin circulating,” laughed the
37-year-old diva as she flew ft, un-
accompanied, from Amarillo, Tex.,
at midnight.
"My husband doesn’t need a wife
chasing after him and I don’t need
a husband chasing after me.”
The man she married after a
breakfast table proposal last week
—Homer V. Johannsen, 35, attor-
ney—is in Chicago, Miss McCormic
explained, for “we’ve both got
-
PAPA SPANK!
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. —
County Welfare Officer A. W.
Cline considered sending a 63-year-
old negro to the county home.
"I don’t want to go to any
county home. I want to go home to
my daddy,” the gray haired negro
protested.
So home he went. The 82-year-
’ .ce-
o--oe-c- — Aph.e,-
. - s-c,-- 4 ■■ X
. -u. .-i 'i
-.a-e■ o
SEASONAL OUTLOOK
FREMONT, O. — Sanduky’s
n county commissioners buttoned up
their overcoats to sit through a
meeting in the new 3300.000 court-
“My father in Amarillo wanted
to see him, too. But I decided to
wait until later to show him off
down there in the cattle country.
“Hi probably fly back to Chi-
cago for the holidays, in case he
doesn’t fly out here. Meanwhile, I
hope I get over an awful cold.'.
■ ii .1 . । ■■■■ l in
Ulster is the most northern of
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 64, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 1, 1936, newspaper, December 1, 1936; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1437910/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cooke County Library.